"Tomar a todo el país como Dios y el hombre lo han hecho." ("Take the whole country as God and man have made it.") – Spoken by Bartolomé Mitre after the Battle of Pavon in 1861, about the need for national unification and federalization of all Argentine provinces.

"Ahora comienza una época de paz y administración." ("Now we begin a period of peace and administration.") – Spoken by then President Julio Argentino Roca during his inauguration speech in 1880, promising that peace and national organization would be achieved in his presidency after nearly thirty years of civil war and internal conflict.

"Que se rompa, pero que no se doble." ("Let it break, but never bend.") – The last words of Leandro Alem, leader of the Unión Cívica Radical, in his suicide letter, which was written in 1896. The phrase refers to his party's intransigent doctrine. Now commonly used as a slogan for the UCR.

"La única verdad es la realidad." ("The only truth is reality.") – A phrase typically used by President Juan Domingo Perón when telling his allies to be rational.[1]

"Mejor que decir es hacer, y mejor que prometer es realizar." ("Better than saying is doing, and better than promising is accomplishing.") – Perón, in a speech when he was Secretary of Labour and Welfare.[1]

"El año 2000 nos encontrará unidos o dominados." ("The year 2000 will find us united or dominated".) – Perón, talking about the need for Latin American integration.[2]

"Cuando uno de los nuestros caiga, caerán cinco de los de ellos." ("For each one of ours that falls, five of theirs will fall.") – Spoken by President Juan D. Perón on 31 August 1955, addressing his supporters to take revenge for the bombing of Buenos Aires by the military on 16 June the same year, which had caused around 300 casualties.[3]

"Hay que pasar el invierno." ("We have to endure the winter.")[6] – Said in 1960 by Álvaro Alsogaray, Minister of Economy in the Frondizi government, referring to the hardships required to get through the economic troubles in the country, which was in dire need of oil.

"No renunciaré, no me suicidaré, no me iré del país" ("I will not resign, I will not commit suicide, I will not leave the country.") – Said in 1962 by President Arturo Frondizi under the threat of a military coup d'état. He initially resisted his ousting but was eventually forced at gunpoint into arrest in the Isla Martín García Prison.

"El comandante en jefe de las fuerzas armadas soy yo." ("The commander in chief of the armed forces is I.") – Said in 1966 by then President Arturo Illia to General Juan Carlos Onganía when the latter told the president that the armed forces were starting a coup d'état.

"Estúpidos imberbes." ("Young idiots.") – Insult infamously used by Juan Perón to refer to the Montoneros faction of his party while expelling them from Plaza de Mayo.

"Este viejo adversario despide a un amigo." ("This old adversary bids farewell to a friend.") – Said in 1974 by former head of the UCR, Ricardo Balbín at Juan Domingo Perón's funeral. Balbín had been Perón's biggest enemy during his political career, but the phrase symbolizes how, despite their enmity, Balbín was respectful enough to solemnly attend his funeral.[7]

"Es una incógnita, es un desaparecido. No tiene entidad, no está. No está ni muerto ni vivo, está desaparecido." ("It's an unknown, it's a disappeared. It has no entity, it is not there. It is Neither dead or alive, it is disappeared.") – Spoken in 1979 by de facto President Jorge Videla regarding the people who were sent into forced disappearances during the Proceso de Reorganización Nacional.[8]

"El que apuesta al dólar pierde." ("Whoever bets on the dollar loses") – Said in 1981 by then Minister of Economy Lorenzo Sigaut, paradoxically, two days before a large devaluation. Two days after this statement the dollar increased in value by 30% making everyone who had "bet" to the dollar rich.

"Si quieren venir, que vengan. ¡Les presentaremos batalla!" ("If they want to come, let them come. We will offer them a battle!") – Said by de facto President Leopoldo Galtieri regarding the British during the events that led to the Falklands War.

"La casa está en orden." ("The house is in order.") – Said by President Raúl Alfonsín about the Casa Rosada (The official headquarters of the executive power) after a failed coup d'état by the right-wing Carapintadas movement.

"¡A vos no te va tan mal, gordito!" ("You're not doing so badly, fatty!") – Yelled by Raúl Alfonsín to a heckling overweight man in the crowd during a speech, who complained about food shortages. An ironic line, since according to Alfonsín, the overweight man did not lack food.

"Síganme, no los voy a defraudar." ("Follow me, I will not let you down.") – Campaign slogan of President Carlos Menem. In retrospect ironic due to the extreme neoliberal policies that characterized Menem's presidency, which contradicted the populist promises of his campaign and the political corruption that characterized his presidency.

"Tenemos que dejar de robar por al menos dos años." ("We should stop embezzling for at least two years") – Trade-unionistLuis Barrionuevo in an interview in 1991, referring to the then massive amount of political corruption in the country.

"El país está...bien." ("The country is...fine.") – A phrase said by Fernando de la Rúa when the 2000 Argentine Crisis started.

"Argentina es un país condenado al éxito." ("Argentina is a country doomed to success") – Phrase recurrently used by Eduardo Duhalde during his exercise of presidency after the 2001 crisis.[9]

"Mi voto no es positivo, mi voto es en contra." ("My vote is not positive, my vote is against.") – Phrase pronounced by Vice President Julio Cobos in 2008 in the Senate, when he voted against a farm tax project from his own political force.[10]

"Me quiero ir." ("I want to leave.")[11] – Phrase spoken by Minister of the Economy Hernán Lorenzino to suddenly end an interview with Greek journalist Eleni Varvitsioti when she asked a question about the country's inflation that he was unable to answer.

"For the first time, we have a nation for a continent, and a continent for a nation." Said by Sir Edmund Barton, first elected Prime Minister of the Commonwealth of Australia, in the 1890s.[13]

"The forgotten people." Said in a 1942 speech by Robert Menzies, referring to the middle class, defined as lying between "the rich and powerful: those who control great funds and enterprises, and are as a rule able to protect themselves" and "the mass of unskilled people, almost invariably well-organised, and with their wages and conditions safeguarded by popular law".[14]

"The light on the hill." Said in a 1949 speech by Ben Chifley, referring to the objective of the Australian Labor Party: "not as putting an extra sixpence into somebody's pocket, or making somebody Prime Minister or Premier, but as a movement bringing something better to the people, better standards of living, greater happiness to the mass of the people. We have a great objective – the light on the hill".[15]

"Life wasn't meant to be easy." Attributed to Malcolm Fraser, Prime Minister of Australia from November 1975 until March 1983 (but is in fact a quotation from 'Back to Methuselah' by George Bernard Shaw).[17]

"If this government cannot get the adjustment ... and a sensible economic policy then Australia is basically done for. We will just end up being a third rate economy ... a banana republic." Said by Paul Keating in an interview to John Laws on 14 May 1986.[18]

"Lernen Sie Geschichte, Herr Reporter!" ("Study History, Mr. Reporter") said by then Chancellor Bruno Kreisky to TV journalist Ulricht Brunner, who had questioned Kreisky's comparing the actions of political opponents to fascism in the 1930s.[30]

"Ohne die Partei bin ich nichts" ("Without the Party I am nothing") said by Federal Chancellor Fred Sinowatz of the then Austrian Socialist Party[31]

"Ich weiß, das klingt alles sehr kompliziert...", usually rendered as "Es ist alles sehr kompliziert..." ("I know, this all sounds complicated...", "Everything is very complicated...") said by Federal Chancellor Fred Sinowatz; the phrase is used ironically to hide the fact that one is not able to elaborate on a subject or may even be clueless about it.[32]

"Shadinota Birodhi Shokti" (Anti-liberation forces) – Used to describe the political parties/Pakistan Army and intelligence services/Islamic extremist and militant groups which opposed the independence of Bangladesh in 1971.

"Jago Bangladesh" (Wake Up Bangladesh) – Moeen U Ahmed, former Chief of Army Staff, Bangladesh Army in 2007

"Só morto sairei do Catete"! ("Only dead I'll leave the Catete [Palace]!") – said by then-president Getúlio Vargas when he was being pressed by opposition parties to leave the presidency.

"E se o Pitta não for um bom prefeito, nunca mais vote em mim." ("And if Pitta can't be a good mayor, you should never vote for me again.") – said by Paulo Maluf in the campaign for the 1996 São Paulo city elections, where he supported Celso Pitta. Pitta was later involved in corruption scandals and served time in prison.[43]

"Estupra, mas não mata." ("Rape, but don't kill.") – said by Paulo Maluf during his classes in one of São Paulo's University.

"Relaxa e goza!" ("Relax and enjoy!") – said by Marta Suplicy at the peak of the 2006–2007 Brazilian aviation crisis, taken from an older, longer non-political popular saying, "Se a curra é inevitável, relaxa e goza" ("If the rape is inevitable, relax and enjoy"). The word "goza" comes from the verb "gozar" which, in formal Brazilian Portuguese, means "to enjoy" (in literal sense) or "to make fun of/to zombate at" (in another sense); in the case of the aforementioned sentence, it comes from the vulgar Brazilian Portuguese expression "to have an orgasm" (equalling to sexual verb "to cum").[44]

"Bebo-o porque é líquido. Se fosse sólido, comê-lo-ia." ("I drink it because it's liquid. If it were solid, I would eat it.") – said by Jânio Quadros when asked by a reporter why he used to drink. Quadros' use of embedded, implicit nouns ("-o" and "-lo-") make the phrase overly formal for modern political speech.[45]

"Brasil, ame-o ou deixe-o!" ("Brazil, love it or leave it!") – said by Brazilian military dictatorship president Emílio Garrastazu Médici in 1970, as the Brazilian Army's motto of armed combat against Communistguerrilla fighters, who intended to overthrow the military dictatorship. The sentence implied that anyone aligned with any kind of left-wing movements at the time was supposed to leave the country in order to not get arrested or even killed amid the subsequent chaos.

"Meus amigos e minhas amigas! Estou absolutamente convencido de que nunca antes na história deste país..." ("My [male] friends and my [female] friends! I am absolutely convinced that never before in the history of this country...") – said by Lula whenever he praises his own government.[46]

"Saio da vida para entrar na história." ("I leave life to enter history.") – the very last sentence of Getúlio Vargas's Carta Testamento, a letter he wrote to the citizens of Brazil before his (presumed) suicide.

"Not necessarily conscription but conscription if necessary." Said by William Lyon Mackenzie King in the House of Commons on 10 June 1942, it reflected the federal government's ambiguous response to conscription (or a draft) in World War II, which eventually led to the Conscription Crisis of 1944.

"We shall be Canadians first, foremost, and always, and our policies will be decided in Canada and not dictated by any other country." John G. Diefenbaker[48]

"I am a Canadian, free to speak without fear, free to worship in my own way, free to stand for what I think right, free to oppose what I believe wrong, free to choose those who shall govern my country. This heritage of freedom I pledge to uphold for myself and all mankind." John G. Diefenbaker, introducing the Canadian Bill of Rights in 1960.

"Gentlemen, we must all realize that neither side has any monopoly on sons of bitches", said by C.D. Howe while in Washington, D.C. to resolve a shipping dispute.[49]

"Vive le Québec libre!" (Long live a free Quebec) – said by the president of the French Republic Charles de Gaulle on an official visit in Canada in 1967.

"Living next to you is in some ways like sleeping with an elephant. No matter how friendly or even-tempered is the beast, if I can call it that, one is affected by every twitch and grunt." Pierre Trudeau on the relationship between Canada and the United States[51]

"If there's one thing I can be accused of, it's stupidity." — said by Bill Vander Zalm in reference to the conflict of interest he had in the Fantasy Gardens amusement park (now defunct) while serving as Premier of British Columbia.

"What is the real deficit, ma'am? What is the real deficit?" – said by Lucien Bouchard to Kim Campbell during the 1993 Canadian federal election English language leader's debate, in response to constant revisions in revenue estimates that year.

"It is a target we will meet, come hell or high water." – said by Paul Martin Jr. in 1994, then Finance Minister and later Prime Minister, vowing to balance the federal budget.

"I'm entitled to my entitlements." - said by David Dingwall, when questioned by a Parliamentary committee about why he should receive a severance package, after having resigned as head of the Royal Canadian Mint over the issue of charging questionable personal expenses.

"À ceux qui frappaient à notre porte ce matin, on pourra leur offrir un emploi, dans le Nord autant que possible" ("To those who knock on our door this morning, we can offer them a job in the North as much as possible") – Québec Premier Jean Charest, making a mean joke about the students massively protesting outside of the Montreal Board of Trade building. Charest was highly criticized for this, and the student movement later used this quote as a protest slogan[60]

"Because it’s 2015." – said by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau during his swearing-in Ceremony on 4 November 2015, when asked by the media why it was important to have a Cabinet reflective of Canadian society including one that was gender balanced.

"不管白猫黑猫，逮住老鼠就是好猫。" (No matter if it is a white cat or a black cat; as long as it can catch mice, it is a good cat.) Said by Deng Xiaoping, paramount leader of china, in reference to economic liberalization.[63]

"你办事，我放心。" (With you in charge, I am at ease), Chairman Mao Zedong's alleged dying instructions to Hua Guofeng in 1976, used by the latter and his supporters to justify his position as Mao's handpicked successor.[64]

"你懂的" (You know what I mean), answer given by a spokesperson of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference to a question about the case of Zhou Yongkang in 2013. Essentially means "I think you know about it, I know about it, but we cannot talk about it." Since then, it has been used in a similar context to apply to many other officials.

"一派胡言!" (A load of bullshit!), response given by Bo Xilai when asked if his son was driving around a Ferrari to have dinner with the daughter of then-U.S. Ambassador Jon Huntsman, Jr..[65]

Try our breast – lawmaker-elect Gary Chan's comment upon being declared elected in the early morning of 8 September 2008. The phrase he intended to say was 'try our best'. The phrase has since been used as a derogatory way to describe people's problem with proper pronunciations.

"Tenemos que reducir la corrupción a sus justas proporciones" ("We must reduce corruption to its fair proportions") as said by former president Julio César Turbay Ayala.

"América Latina debe seguir el modelo de educación de Estados Unidos, que permite que los niños desde muy temprana edad manejen el idioma inglés." ("Latin America must follow the US education model, that allows children to handle the English language from a very early age") as said by the former president Julio César Turbay Ayala.

"Yo no estoy a favor ni en contra, sino todo lo contrario" ("I'm not in favor nor against, but quite the opposite") as said by former president Julio César Turbay Ayala.

"Las encuestas son como las morcillas: muy sabrosas hasta que uno sabe cómo las hacen". ("Statistics are like blood sausage: they are delicious until you find out how they're made") as said by former presidential candidate Álvaro Gómez Hurtado.

"Colombianos, bienvenidos al futuro" ("Colombians, welcome to the future") as said by former president César Gaviria Trujillo.

"Aquí estoy y aquí me quedo" ("Here I am, and here I stay") as said former president Ernesto Samper Pizano.

"Si entró dinero del narcotráfico en mi campaña presidencial, en todo caso fue a mis espaldas". ("If there was money from the drug traffic in my presidential campaign, it was behind my back") as said former president Ernesto Samper Pizano.

"Trabajar, trabajar y trabajar" ("To work, to work and to work") as said by Álvaro Uribe Vélez in his presidential speeches.

"No más sangre, no más depredaciones en nombre de ningún partido político: paz, justicia y libertad" ("Not more blood, not more pillagings in the name of any political party: peace, justice and freedom") as said from former president Gustavo Rojas Pinilla in 1953.

"Ytringsfrihed er ytringsfrihed er ytringsfrihed. Der er intet men." ("Freedom of speech is freedom of speech is freedom of speech. There is no 'but'.") Per Nyholm about the cartoons in the Jyllands-Posten.

"Tuli iso jytky!" (Could be translated to "That was a huge hit!") and "Tänään on tilipäivä!" ("Today is payday!") by Timo Soini after the historical parliamental election victory of True Finns in April 2011

"Saatanan tunarit" ("Fucking blunderers") by president Urho Kekkonen, first said in a critical letter to the former governor of the Kymi district. Has since lived on among the Finnish people.

"Aivan aluksi haluaisin kiittää..." ("First of all, I would like to thank...") by Jutta Urpilainen of Social Democratic Party of Finland. She started many of her interviews with those words after the 2008 parliamentary elections.[66] She used the phrase also after the 2011 elections as a joke.[67]

"Mais vous avez tout à fait raison, M. le premier ministre." (But you are absolutely right, Mr. Prime Minister.) François Mitterrand responding to presidential candidate Jacques Chirac, who said he would call him Mr. Mitterrand, during the 1988 French Presidential debate instead of "Mr. President" since they were nothing but two citizens, not two officials.

"Ich kenne keine Partei mehr, ich kenne nur Deutsche!" (I no longer know of [political] party, I only know Germans) Wilhelm II 1914 in a speech at the parliament, referencing the endorsement of the war by the formerly shunned Social Democrats[75]

"Und es gilt auch der Satz. Zum Mitschreiben: Die Rente ist sicher." (And this sentence stands. To co-write: The pension is safe.) Norbert Blüm Firstly used in the campaign 1986. The sentence is often used to show that the government is lying to the people.[80]

"Die Sicherung der Grenze ist das souveräne Recht eines jeden Staates, und so auch unserer Deutschen Demokratischen Republik." (Securing the border is the sovereign right of every state, and that applies to our German Democratic Republic as well.) Erich Honecker

"Niemand hat die Absicht, eine Mauer zu errichten." (No one intends to build a wall.) Walter Ulbricht, 15 June 1961, less than two months before the Berlin Wall was built[82]

Federal Republic of Germany 1990–present

"Wirtschaft ist für die Menschen da, und nicht umgekehrt, und Demokratie gehört bei die Wirtschaft mit bei." (The economy is for the people, and not vice versa, and economy is a part of democracy.) Franz Müntefering[83] The second part of the compound sentence contains a "folksy" grammatical error that is impossible to translate into English.

"Es ist Deutschland hier." ("This is Germany." Literally: "It is Germany here.", which is bad grammar, produced by a freshly elected foreign minister known for his arrogance who was asked to answer in English, after having been in the press for demonstrating questionable English skills.) Guido Westerwelle[85]

"Λεφτά υπάρχουν" (there is money) said by George Papandreou, Prime Minister of the country from October 2009 to November 2011, with reference to the excessive waste of public money, tax evasion and black economy, in a speech a year before the elections that brought him to power and some months after the September 2008 financial incidents.[87]

"Monnyonle!" (Resign! – with deliberately incorrect spelling and pronunciation) József Torgyán, a former political figure used this phrase very often. The catchphrase became a chanting slogan in demonstrations.

"Elkúrtuk, nem kicsit, nagyon." (We screwed it, not a little but a lot.) Ferenc Gyurcsány, former prime minister and Socialist leader, addressing his party members and MPs in a secret speech which was leaked, causing a major political scandal and street riots.

"Nem hazudtam, de nem bontottam ki az igazság minden részletét." (I didn't lie. I only didn't elaborate on every detail of the truth.) Ferenc Gyurcsány, former prime minister and Socialist leader in an interview.

"A békát sem kérdezik meg, amikor lecsapolják a mocsarat. ("Frogs are not asked for opinion when you want to drain a marshland.") János Kóka, the former leader of Alliance of Free Democrats relating to substantial changes he wanted to introduce in policies for higher education and research.

"Sokan voltunk, de mégsem voltunk elegen." (There were many of us but not enough of us.) Viktor Orbán, former center-of-right prime minister, Fidesz party leader about a lost election.

"Ganyang Malaysia": Destroy Malaysia [literally: gobble it down raw as per a freshly killed animal] popular anti-neo-colonial slogan of Sukarno, still remaining very popular policy with the Indonesian people to absorb the British-created state of Malaysia, especially in times of Indonesia-Malaysia confrontation.

"Marhaeni" and "Marhaenisme"- the Indonesian everyman and enrichment via traditional economics as advocated by Sukarno

"I henceforth procalim Tri Kora" (Three commands, namely: tri-command: 1. Defeat the formation of the puppet state of Papua of Dutch colonial make., 2. Unfurl the Honoured Red and White Flag in West Irian, Indonesian native land., 3. Be ready for general mobilisation to defend the independence and unity of Country and Nation.) Sukarno in his United Nations address and a commonly paraphrased slogan when addressing nationalist issues.

"Yes, I am a Muslim. But first I am an Indonesian Nationalist "- Sukarno, commonly paraphrased to reinforce Indonesian nationalist-secularist and patriotism.[88]

"The sort of smug know-all commentator... I suppose if anything annoys me, that annoys me... I could instance a load of fuckers whose throat I'd cut, and push over the nearest cliff, but there's no percentage in that." – Former TaoiseachCharles Haughey speaking to Hot Press writer John Waters in 1984.[98]

"I am sick of answering questions about the fucking peace process." – TaoiseachJohn Bruton famously upsetting a local radio reporter in Cork for which he later apologised.[98]

"Crap, total crap." – TaoiseachAlbert Reynolds to dismiss claims that he never spoke to his coalition partner from the PDs, Des O'Malley. Described as a slip of the tongue by press secretary, Sean Duignan, when initially used in an interview with the Sunday Tribune, but later revived for RTÉ and elsewhere.[98]

I suppose I'm going a bit too far when I say this but I'd like to ask Mr. Quinlivan is the brothel still closed?[99] – Minister of Defense Willie O'Dea February 2009 accusation against a local election candidate Maurice Quinlivan. In less than a year, O'Dea would be forced to resign as Minister after submitting an affidavit denying he made the remarks.

"There was a confluence of events" – TaoiseachBrian Cowen defending his poor performance during a radio interview on the morning of a Fianna Fáil pre-parliamentary event on 14 September 2010.

"There was a hoarseness in my voice" – TaoiseachBrian Cowen defending his performance on the same occasion.

"כולנו אשמים" ("We are all to blame") – President Ephraim Katzir, commenting on the responsibility for the Yom Kippur War, on November 24, 1973.

"איני יכול עוד" ("I cannot take it anymore") – said by Prime Minister Menachem Begin in his resignation speech, September 15, 1983.

"מה אתה עשית בשביל מדינה" ("What did you do for country?") – said by Shmuel Flatto-Sharon to Aryeh Eliav during a debate in the Knesset, the catchphrase is preserved with its grammatical error, as a symbol of impertinence of an immigrant, unfamiliar with efforts and achievements of previous generations.

"מי בעד חיסול הטרור?" ("Who supports the eradication of terror?") – said by Minister Ariel Sharon, interrupting a speech by Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir, in a political debate of the Likkud party, on February 12, 1990.

"אני אנווט" ("I will navigate") – from Yitzhak Rabin's victory speech on the night of elections, June 23, 1992, understood by many to indicate he solidified his power and marginalizing Shimon Peres.

"מייד'לע, ראית פעם גבר סורג גרביים? אז אישה לא יכולה להיות טייסת קרב" ("Meidele (Yiddish for "honey"), have you ever seen a man darning socks? So therefore a woman cannot be a combat pilot") – said by former President and former Air Force commandant Ezer Weizman in a phone conversation with Alice Miller, a soldier who successfully petitioned the High Court to force the Israeli Air Force to open its pilots' course to women in 1994.

"שלום, חבר" ("Goodbye, friend") – said by United States President Bill Clinton at the funeral of Yitzhak Rabin.

"יתנו, יקבלו. לא יתנו, לא יקבלו" ("If they [the Palestinians] will give, they will get. If they won't give, they won't get") – used during the 1996 election campaign by Benjamin Netanyahu, at the peak of the Peace Process started after the Oslo Accords.

"הם מ-פ-ח-ד-י-ם" ("They are s-c-a-r-e-d") – Used several times by Benjamin Netanyahu to ridicule his Labour opponents.

"?אני לוזר" ("Am I a loser?") – question asked by Shimon Peres in a speech in a Labour Party meeting in 1997, after he lost his 6th election in a row. The crowd shouted "Yes!".

"אני ראש ממשלה לא פופולרי" ("I'm not a very popular Prime Minister") – said by Prime Minister Ehud Olmert following reports that his approval rate is plummeting.

"Il potere logora chi non ce l'ha" ("Power wears only those who do not have it") – said by Giulio Andreotti

"Riconosco i miei limiti ma non vivo in un mondo di giganti" ("I recognize my limits but when I look around I realise I am not living exactly in a world of giants.") – said by Giulio Andreotti

"Una corte di nani e ballerine" ("A court of midgets and ballerinas") – said by Socialist Party politicians to scorn the powerless National Assembly of their own party, filled with public figures by the party leader Bettino Craxi

"Meglio un passerotto in mano che un tacchino sul tetto" ("It's better a sparrow in one's grasp than a turkey on the roof") – said by Pierluigi Bersani

"I want to say a simple thing, that the dividing line exists not between Jordan and Israel, but between the proponents of peace and the opponents of peace." said by King Hussein

"Let me say this loud and clear. There is a world of difference between terrorist acts and the Islamic Shari'a. Islam is not only a religion, but a way of life. And at its heart lie the sacred principles of tolerance and dialogue." said by King Hussein

"Real victories are those that protect human life, not those that result from its destruction or emerge from its ashes." said by King Hussein

"I am totally against the idea that a Muslim woman should not have the same opportunities as a Muslim man to learn, to open up, to work, help shape the future. To close Islam down to a sexist approach is totally intolerable and ridiculous. It's not Islam." said by King Hussein

"Jordan has a strange, haunting beauty and a sense of timelessness. Dotted with the ruins of empires once great, it is the last resort of yesterday in the world of tomorrow. I love every inch of it." said by King Hussein

"For our part, we shall continue to work for the new dawn when all the Children of Abraham and their descendants are living together in the birthplace of their three great monotheistic religions, a life free from fear, a life free from want – a life in peace. "said by King Hussein

"Sanaz'hafo ana wal malayeen li tat'heer libya shibran shibran, bytan bytan, dar dar, zanga zanga, fardan fardan, hatta tatatahar al bilad min al danasi wal anjas." (I will crawl with the millions to purge Libya inch by inch, home by home, home by home [sic], street by street, individual by individual, until the land is purged from the uncleaness and impurities.". Said by Muammar Gaddafi on the 22 of February, 2011, talking about the rebels. The phrase became popular after an Israeli Tunisian made a musical autotune out of the funny-sounding "Zanga Zanga", which means "Street by street" in the Libyan accent.[100]

"Šikau ir tapšnojau" (approx. "I took a dump and patted it with my hand") – uttered by President Rolandas Paksas during private conversation on phone. It was intercepted and revealed to the public by the authorities during corruption investigation. The phrase should be understood as: "I couldn't care less"

"Aš neatsistatydinsiu!" ("I will not resign!") – the standard phrase of President Rolandas Paksas, constantly repeated both before and after his impeachment

"La política es como las fotos: el que se mueve, no sale" (Politics is like photography; if you move, you won't show up,[102] or you won't get elected)[103] – Fidel Velázquez, old-guard politician and worker's union corrupt leader, commenting on how inaction is often a better recipe in politics (especially old-style Mexican politics).[104]

"Vivir fuera del presupuesto, es vivir en el error" (To live away from the budget is to live in error)

"Ciertamente..." (Certainly...) – The most famous catchphrase of Vicente Fox, used in all his speeches several times.

"¿Y yo por qué?" (Why me?) – Response by Vicente Fox when confronted by CNI Canal 40 television workers to take action on their TV channel assault by TV Azteca.

"...Y a otra cosa, mariposa" – A popular rhyme literally meaning "to another thing, butterfly", roughly equivalent to "moving right along"; used by Vicente Fox to change subjects when confronted by a delicate matter.

"Comes y te vas" (You eat and then you leave) – Very popular phrase by journalist Carlos Marín referring to the incident in which President Vicente Fox called Fidel Castro asking him to quietly leave after lunch in the 2002 UNO summit at Monterrey. The telephone recording was later made public by Fidel Castro ridiculing President Fox, much to the delight of many Mexican people.

"Si no pueden, ¡Renuncien!" (If you can't, resign!) A phrase first attributed to businessman and chairman of Mexico SOS (an NGO advocating for better security in Mexico), and thereafter used in 2008 during massive demonstrations in Mexico City demanding better security.

"Haiga sido como haiga sido" – a barbarism said by Felipe Calderón, the right phrase in good Spanish would be "Haya sido como haya sido" (No matter how it would have been)

"If we publicly declare that Cuba is a threat to our security, 40 million Mexicans will die laughing." – Mexican ambassador to the United States, in response to the Kennedy administration's 1961 call to collective action against Cuba.

"Twee dingen:" ("Two things:") – Joop den Uyl, Prime Minister 1973–1977, leader of the social-democratic party PvdA. In interviews, many of Den Uyl's answers started with these two words, sending a signal to the listener to drop any expectation of a simple yes or no. The name Twee Dingen has been adopted by several radio news shows, e.g. http://www.radio1.nl/tweedingen

"Het wordt nooit meer zoals het was" ("Things will never be the same again") – erroneously but persistently ascribed to Joop den Uyl, Prime Minister 1973–1977. The occasion was his nationally syndicated radio and TV speech of 1 December 1973 about the oil crisis. What he actually said was: "Zo bezien, keert de wereld van voor de oliecrisis niet terug." ("It appears that the world as it was before the oil crisis will not return".)[108]

"Gaat u maar rustig slapen." (Just go to sleep peacefully) – According to popular belief, prime minister Hendrikus Colijn said these words in a radio speech on the eve on the German invasion of the Netherlands in 1940. In reality, Colijn was not prime minister anymore by then. The phrase refers to a radio speech by Colijn in March 1936 in which he reacted on the remilitarization of the Rhineland. In this speech Colijn said: Ik verzoek den luisteraars dan ook om, wanneer zij straks hunne legersteden opzoeken, even rustig te gaan slapen als zij ook andere nachten doen. Er is voorshands geen enkele reden om ongerust te zijn. (That is why I would like to ask the listeners to sleep as tranquilly as they do on other nights, when they turn into their beds shortly. For the moment there is no reason whatsoever to be alarmed)[111]

"Willen we naar de Dam? Dan gáán we naar de Dam!" (If we want to [march to] Dam Square? Then we will!) – trade union leader Herman Bode during a trade union manifestation on 4 March 1980.[112]

"Mevrouwtje, ga lekker naar huis, koken, veel beter" ("Little lady, just go home, do the cooking. Much better.") – Pim Fortuyn, telling well-known reporter Wouke van Scherrenburg to stop asking him about being a "bad loser for refusing to answer" the night before his father's funeral.[113]

"And I'm going to give it to you if you hold your breath just for a moment ... I can smell the uranium on it as you lean forward." – New Zealand Prime Minister David Lange arguing that "Nuclear Weapons Are Morally Indefensible", in reply to a negating debater on 1 March 1985.[114] Often paraphrased as "I can smell the uranium on your breath".

"Wombat." – Former New Zealand Prime Minister David Lange when asked by a journalist "Prime Minister, I wonder if we might have a brief word about Australia"

"Last cab off the rank" – said by Prime Minister Helen Clark when describing her relationship with the Maori political party in not wanting to negotiate an agreement with them, even as a last resort, in 2005.

"I'm thinking of asking the Minister of Police for a Taser gun for Trevor." – Prime Minister Helen Clark when asked about her minister Trevor Mallard threatening to expose details of MPs' private lives.[119]

"The statement which has been made by the Leader of the Opposition was that the intelligence has stopped. I don't know whether that was a personal confession or whether it was a statement of position." – Prime Minister David Lange.[121]

"The French, for instance, love the coq." ACT Party leader David Seymour, while discussing symbols for a proposed new national flag.[122]

"Eg er djupt såra og vonbroten" (I am deeply hurt and disappointed) – Kjell Bondevik during a televised speech in 1971 explaining the failure of negotiating a coalition government. This catch phrase is often quoted, even by people not usually writing in nynorsk, to express deep disappointment.

"Aldri mer 9. april" (Never again 9 April), referring to the German invasion in 1940. Often invoked by supporters of increased defense spending during the post-war years.

"sauer er ålreite dyr" (sheep are all right animals) – Communist party candidate Liv Finstad in 1983 explaining why her party wanted increase in sheep farming. Now quoted as example of ridiculous explanations of policy outside your field of expertise, or a funny answer to interview questions on topics the candidate doesn't have an informed answer.

"Det norske hus" (The Norwegian house), a cliché coined by Torbjørn Jagland, now often referring to slogans regarded as vacuous rhetoric.

"Me får finne oss i at synda er komen til jorda, men me vil ikkje ha ho i fargar" (We can accept that sin has arrived on Earth, but we don't want it in color), Einar Førde summarizing the opposition during the debate on introducing color television.[123] Quoted to ridicule puritanism.

"Binabalaan ko sila: walang kaibigan, walang kumpare, walang kamag-anak, o anak na maaaring magsamantala sa ngayon." (This is my warning: no friends, no best friends, no family members or children may take advantage now. Joseph Ejercito-Estrada, Philippine president in his 1998 inaugural address.[132]

"I eat death threats for breakfast" – Miriam Defensor Santiago, In 1988, President Corazon Aquino appointed Santiago as commissioner of immigration and deportation.[1] At that time, the Commission (CID) was one of the most corrupt government agencies in Southeast Asia. Santiago declared the Philippines as "the fake passport capital of the world," and directed raids against criminal syndicates, including the Yakuza. She filled the CID detention center with alien criminals, and ordered construction of another detention center. Because of this, she received serious death threats, but proclaimed: "I eat death threats for breakfast.

"Kayo ang boss ko." (You are my boss.) – Benigno Aquino III, incumbent President of the Philippines to the half-a-million people who witnessed his inauguration at the Quirino Grandstand, Manila on 30 June 2010.

"Nie chcem, ale muszem" ("I don't want to, but I have to", spoken with a characteristic pronunciation – normally it should be "Nie chcę, ale muszę") Polish President Lech Wałęsa – Wałęsa motivated his political career after People's Republic of Poland period.

"Nie pierwszy raz staje mi... przychodzi mi stawać przed Izbą" (this mistake came from the wrong usage of the passive voice, creating a colloquial sentence. The only possible translation of that phrase is: "It's not the first time when I get a hard-on... hard time speaking in the Parliament.") by Polish member of parliament Józef Zych. He was awarded Silver Mouth 2005 prize as a result of this gaffe.[136]

"É só fazer as contas!" (Just do the maths) – António Guterres, ex-prime-minister to the journalists, after being unable to calculate 6% of the Portuguese GDP

"Jamais, jamais!" (Never, never) – Mário Lino, Portuguese Minister of Public Works, Transportation and Communication, referring experts telling him that Lisbon's new international airport shouldn't be built south of the Tagus River. Later that location was actually chosen to build the airport.

"Em tempos de crise, a democracia deveria ser suspensa durante 6 meses para endireitar as coisas, depois voltava-se à Democracia..." (In times of crisis, we should have a period of 6 months of dictatorship to straighten things up, then return to democracy...) – Manuela Ferreira Leite, general secretary of PSD, about the current economic crisis.

"Olhe que não, doutor, olhe que não!" (We do not, we do not!) – answer from Álvaro Cunhal, secretary-general of the Communist Party, to Mário Soares, secretary-general of the Portuguese Socialist Party, in 1975, after the latter accused him in a television debate of wanting a dictatorship for Portugal.

"Iarna nu-i ca vara" (Winter's not like summer) Traian Băsescu's reply, as Minister of Transport, when asked about what measures he took after countless streets and villages were blocked by the heavy snow.[138]

"Iar pe cei care s-au apucat să-mi numere găinile, îi rog să-mi numere şi ouăle" (I invite those who started to count my hens, to also count my eggs/balls) Adrian Năstase implied the secondary meaning of testicles, for ouă (eggs) in Romanian, in this cheeky reply as Prime Minister, after press inquiries regarding his chicken farm, part of a larger set of corruption accusations.[139]

"Să trăiţi bine" (May you live well) One of the slogans used by president Traian Băsescu in the 2004 presidential campaign. After he was elected, Romanians' standard of living did not perceivably improve, and his former slogan became probably the most famous example of empty political campaign promises, used both by Mr. Băsescu's political opponents and by disgruntled citizens as a cynical way of expressing critique and discontent towards his presidency.[140][141] In 2014, Băsescu mentioned that this electoral slogan was meant as wishing well to the Romanians, not as a promise, and that he was misunderstood,[142] although this very tagline was used in a 2004 electoral poster along various political promises.[143]

"Poţi să ai şi succesuri, poţi să ai şi eşecuri" (You may meet successes, you may meet failures) A sentence that uses a wrong plural form for "success", part of a 2008 interview by Elena Basescu, when she was vice-president of the youth wing of Romania's Liberal Democrat Party. She is known for failing to use proper Romanian grammar on several occasions. Her wrong rendering of "successes" became famous as a catchphrase in Romania, similar to "the internets" in its humorous portrayal of ignorance.[144]

"Mihaela, dragostea mea" (Mihaela, my love) In the Romanian presidential campaign of 2009 both opposing candidates, Traian Băsescu and Mircea Geoană claimed victory and delivered winning speeches after the first exit-polls, making for a particularly awkward situation. After the votes from the Romanian diaspora came in, Traian Băsescu won the elections, turning Mircea Geoană into the loser, his winning speech taking a ridiculous note in retrospect, with the part in which he thanks his wife, Mihaela Geoană, coming off as particularly memorable.[145]

"Măi animalule!" sau "De ce strigi, bă, ca animalu'?" ("You animal!" or "Hey you, why do you shout like an animal?") Met in the city of Constanţa by a group of protesters asking him to resign, 1992 Romanian president Ion Iliescu famously lost his temper and addressed these words to a journalist from local newspaper "Telegraf" (allegedly Paul Pârvu) and grabbed him by the neck.[146]

"Starý ujo" (Old Uncle). In 1996, the future President of Slovakia Ivan Gašparovič called the then President of Slovakia Michal Kováč an old dick ("chuj" being a vulgar term derived from the Russian mat) – "Gusto, poď to dokončiť. Mňa tam volajú k tomu starému chujovi." (Gusto, come and finish it for me. They are calling me there to attend to that old dick.) He later claimed he said "starým ujom" (old uncle) instead.[148]

"Strici iz ozadja" ("The Uncles from Behind the Scenes", equivalent to éminence grise). A catchphrase launched by media outlets supportive of the Slovenian Democratic Party, now widespread throughout the political spectrum up to the highest level of governance. A conspiracy theory implying that the elected officials the utterer disagrees with are secretly controlled by anonymous, but influential individuals or networks for own monetary or political gain, to the detriment of honest citizens.[150][151]

"Udbomafija" ("Udbomafia", a portmanteau of UDBA and mafia), another conspiracy theory implying that high-ranking officials of various former Yugoslav secret services (usually of Serbian nationality or sympathizing with Serbians) form a criminal organization that works as a state-within-a-state, ruling Slovenia from behind the scenes even after the fall of communism and terrorizing fighters for democracy. The phrase was coined by the architect Edo Ravnikar, son of the famous Slovene architect Edvard Ravnikar and popularized by his 1995 book Udbomafija: Priročnik za razumevanje tranzicije (Udbomafia: A Handbook for Understanding the Transition) in which he purported to expose this hidden network.[152]

"Tranquilo, Jordi, tranquilo" ("rest easy, Jordi, rest easy"), said by King Juan Carlos to Jordi Pujol, president of the Catalonian government, during the attempted coup d'état February 23, 1981 to ease Pujol's fear of a military government. Said in Spanish or in Catalan (as Tranquil, Jordi, tranquil) to ease anyone's real or alleged anxiety.[155]

"OTAN, de entrada no" The ambiguous slogan launched by Socialist Party PSOE (the phrase can be read either as "No to NATO, in principle" and "No to entry into NATO") during Spanish NATO membership referendum in 1986.

"El que se mueve no sale en la foto" ("If you move, you're out of the picture"). Said by Deputy Prime Minister Alfonso Guerra. It is used in the common parlance both in the literal sense (variant with subjunctive "el que se mueva no sale en la foto") whenever a picture of a group is to be taken, or in the metaphoric, intended sense, alluding to the strictures on personal maneuvering of MPs imposed by the party line [163][164]

¡Manda Huevos! – Federico Trillo, former Minister of Defense and President of the Congress of Deputies

"Nunca máis" (in Galician Never again!") Slogan built against the Prestige oil spill in 2002, but since reused by the left parties against the right parties Spain-wide (in Galician or in Spanish, as "nunca mas").[166]

"No nos falles" (Don't let us down) were the words used by the people on popular gatherings after Zapatero was elected in 2004 general elections.[167]

"Мы вам покажем кузькину мать!" (We shall show you Kuzka's mother!) – Nikita Khrushchev used this expression in public when addressing Richard Nixon in 1959 during a discussion about communism vs. capitalism.

"Vår beredskap är god" (Our [state of] readiness is good), said by Prime Minister Per Albin Hansson on 27 August 1939 on national Swedish radio about the readiness state of the Swedish armed forces. In hindsight, Sweden could not have defended itself against a German invasion, partly because Hansson had led a major disarmament campaign since the 1920s. Nowadays, it is used as a derogatory term describing a statement which is obviously false but intended to keep people calmed down.

"Gärna medalj, men först en rejäl pension" (A medal is fine, but proper retirement pay is first priority), slogan for the Social Democrats in the 1958 general election. The medal referred to is the "För nit och redlighet i rikets tjänst" which is usually given as a retirement award, military and civil service alike, for more the 30 years of long and faithful government employment.

"Nån jävla ordning får det vara i ett parti" (There must be some damn order in a party), uttered by C.-H. Hermansson, leader of the Communist Party (present-day Left Party) at a party convention 1969.

"Ege bir Yunan gölü değildir. Ege bir Türk gölü de değildir. Binaenaleyh Ege, göl değildir. (Aegean is not a Greek Lake. Aegean is not a Turkish Lake. In fact, Aegean is not a Lake.) by Süleyman Demirel

"Любі друзі..." (Dear friends) phrase often used in speeches by Viktor Yushchenko, 3rd president of Ukraine.

"Я верю, что сильных и здоровых людей намного больше, чем этих козлов, которые мешают нам жить!" (I believe that there are more strong and healthy people, than these bastards, which are disturbing us) by Viktor Yanukovich, 4th Ukrainian president (2004, during president election campaign, about those, who were supporting his opponents)

"Працював, очолював підприємства. І от уже 10 років як став чиновником і, так сказати, вліз у дєрьмо" (I was working, leading enterprise. 10 years ago I became a bureaucrat and I stepped in the shit), by Viktor Yanukovich, 4th Ukrainian president (2004, during president election campaign, during the meeting in Zhytomyr region)

"Most of our people have never had it so good" (popularly misquoted as "You've never had it so good!") Harold Macmillan[171]

"A week is a long time in politics" Harold Wilson describing a reversal of political fortune.

"It does not mean that the pound here in Britain, in your pocket or purse or in your bank, has been devalued." (often rendered as "The pound in your pocket") Harold Wilson[172]

"I know what's going on. I'm going on" Harold Wilson at the 1969 May Day Rally following political gossip and unattributed reports that his leadership of the Labour Party would be challenged (The Times, 5 May 1969, p. 1)

"Education, education, education", this was how Tony Blair set out his priorities for office after winning a landslide general election in May 1997.[176]

"Britain will not return to the boom and bust of the past." Gordon Brown on his economic policy, 1999.

"Mr Speaker, the House has noticed the Prime Minister's remarkable transformation in the last few weeks, from Stalin to Mr Bean... creating chaos out of order rather than order out of chaos." Vince Cable referring to Gordon Brown in 2007

"Los argentinos son una manga de ladrones, del primero al último" (The Argentinians are a bunch of thieves, from first to last). Jorge Batlle Ibáñez.[177] giving an interview on the 2002 political and economic crisis whilt not realizing he was being filmmed.

"Compañeros, lamentablemente por ahora los objetivos que nos planteamos no fueron logrados en la ciudad capital" ( "Folks: unfortunately, for now, the objectives that we had were not fully accomplished in the capital city (Caracas)") said by Hugo Chávez 4 February 1992, after the failure of his coup attempt.

"Por ahora" ("For now") is a Venezuelan political catch phrase that alludes to the declarations made by Hugo Chávez after the failure of the coup attempt he led in 1992. The phrase has been used in various occasions after the coup attempt, most notably by Chávez after his proposal for constitutional reform was rejected by the Venezuelan people.

"Sembrar el petróleo" ("sowing oil"; phrase coined by Arturo Uslar Pietri when suggesting the use of oil revenue to develop the nation)

"Calma y cordura" ("Calmness and composure"; frequently used by President Eleazar López Contreras during his turbulent reign)

^Bajuk, Tatiana (1999). "Udbomafija and the Rhetoric of Conspiracy". In Marcus, George E. Paranoia Within Reason: A Casebook on Conspiracy as Explanation. University of Chicago Press. pp. 269–292. ISBN9780226504575.